Dairy Exporter August 2020

Page 21

GLOBAL DAIRY BRAZIL

Brazilian cows: Cow breeds vary as the country spans tropical (in the central) and temperate (southern) regions.

Dairy farming in a land of contrasts Words by: Wagner Beskow

B

razil is a huge dairy products market with 212 million people consuming the equivalent of 35.2 billion litres of milk per year from a variety of dairy products, 97% of which are supplied domestically and exports seldom reach 1% of national production. So how competitive are these farmers and how do they produce milk? Approximately 80% of the farms rely on an extent of grazing that can be compared to New Zealand systems 3 to 5, milked twice a day. Concentrate options abound, similar to those found in the USA, ranging from $204 to $526/t. Milk has always been paid for by volume so milk solids content is low, averaging 3.8% fat and 3.2% crude protein, and valued at $0.42/l in the last 12 months – equivalent to $6/kg MS. Some companies do pay a bonus for milk solids content (percentage, not weight) but the main factor determining farm gate

Transpondo, senior researcher and consultant Wagner Bestow.

price is volume. Thus, larger producers do get higher prices, a politically hot subject justified only by precarious municipal roads and long distances that hugely affect pickup costs. The other 20% of the farms run on semiconfined and confined systems (free stall and composting barns with cows milked three times a day), where concentrate reliance can be as high as 50% of the cows’ diet on a DM basis. The reasons include heat stress, topography, lameness, mud, wide grass growth variations within and

Dairy Exporter | www.nzfarmlife.co.nz | August 2020

between years, but are given mainly by those who, for cultural reasons, do not master or like grazing. Typically milk is produced by small family units on 20 to 40 ha of land, rarely above 100 ha. Production ranges from 0.1 to 1.2 million litres per year from machine milking 12 to 40 cows per labour unit, this at 1.5 to 4 per farm. In contrast, the 100 largest farms produce an average of 7.6 million litres, the largest of them reaching 27.4 million litres per year on a free-stall system connected to a rotary shed milking 320 cows/hour. Notwithstanding that, labour efficiency is low even on large farms, requiring one labour unit to only 40-70 cows. Most milk originates from the Southeast, South and Central regions, in decreasing order of volume. Production is year round with the odd seasonal farms by choice. The South is predominantly subtropical and temperate in places so has no dry season, but the rest of Brazil is tropical and dry between April and September. Annual rainfall ranges from 800 to 2,000mm and temperature from -7°C (South) to 42°C (everywhere except above 700m). A typical tropical farm milks Girolando cows (Gir x Holstein) yielding 2,400 l/305 day lactation or 3,000 l/ha/year (dry stock land and milking platform included): in the South, cows are typically Holstein (10% Jersey) yielding 3,700 l/305 day lactation and 5,500 l/ha/year. With negative to 3% return on equity, these families barely make a living. Some are adopting changes but many are quitting dairy, so a significant free-market selection is taking place with all the pain and arguments it can bring but is widely accepted as necessary. “Dairy farming is not for everyone”. In the next article we will address those who changed their management and views and are now producing from 15,000 to 30,000 l/ha/year, reaping benefits such as 10 to 35% return on equity. How is that being achieved, what did they change, and how far can these farmers get? 21


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Articles inside

Environment and animal welfare spur system change

2min
page 87

Maize silage, the ideal spring supplement

3min
page 89

Select Hereford bulls on merit

1min
page 88

The secret of MUNBV

2min
page 86

The lowdown on good silage

5min
pages 84-85

National dairy trainee winner ‘loves science

7min
pages 82-83

Proactive leadership proves a winner

5min
pages 80-81

Bone injuries: Broken shoulders in heifers

3min
pages 73-74

DairyNZ: Take care using antibiotics for clinical mastitis

2min
page 75

Mycoplasma bovis: Biosecurity a priority to combat disease

3min
pages 78-79

Milk replacers: To curd or not to curd?

6min
page 77

Great soil and water management wins awards

8min
pages 70-72

Doing what’s right’ for whole farm wins awards

13min
pages 62-66

CO Diary: GoDairy - Helping Kiwis get into dairying

3min
pages 45-46

Co-operative vs corporate governance

3min
pages 60-61

Diversity makes for better decisions

3min
page 59

Good governance structure benefits farm business

8min
pages 47-49

Spreading experience

7min
pages 57-58

Learning to govern effectively

1min
pages 50-51

Cashing-in on the culls

6min
pages 42-44

Shining through the drought

9min
pages 39-41

Covid-19 brought a range of challenges for Bridie Virbickas

3min
pages 14-15

Zanda Award: Winning Coaster champions staff training

10min
pages 36-38

Redesigning workplaces to make them attractive to new workers

2min
page 35

Using a Kanban workplace management system to run a Canterbury farm

10min
pages 28-34

Global Dairy – Brazil: Dairy farming in a land of contrasts

3min
page 21

Chloe Davidson shares the joys and challenges of relocating business and family

3min
page 12

High standards in a sensitive environment

9min
pages 24-27

Shiralee Seerden welcomes the extra business of a contract milking position

3min
page 13
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